Excerpt:
...Living in torment is a fine line between the real
and imagined worlds, the cruel and the hopeful worlds
of Gene Merritt. Despite the years of adversity, his
personality is gentle and giving, his sense of humor
remarkable. Classified as developmentally disabled,
Merritt has lived as a ward of the state within an adult
foster care system for most of his adult life. For nearly
fifteen years his home was a substandard trailer in
Rock Hill, South Carolina, which stood in the backyard
of a family paid to 'look after' the easily exploited
Merritt. Alcohol abuse, physical assault, poor hygiene,
and lack of medical care marked his experiences there.
However, while still living in that setting, he began
to produce thousands of exceptional line drawings on
paper. His subjects include stars from old movies and
television re-runs, aliens from outer space and personalities
from popular music and American wrestling, reflecting
a personal visual language not overtly influenced by
any aesthetic other than one created out of Merritt's
own experiences.
Born in Columbia, South Carolina, in 1936 to working-class
parents, Merritt suffered permanent brain damage from
an extended fever during a bout of pneumonia as a child.
His father Clyde was a postal worker and his mother
Erma worked in a department store. Both were alcoholics
known in the bars and clubs of the depression era southern
town. Merritt's father reportedly beat his wife after
periods of heavy drinking, violent episodes that Merritt
remembers as well as having to live periodically with
his mother's sisters.